16 - Bone as a Tissue and Organ Flashcards
What are two types of bone? How do they differ and how are they the same? What percentage of bone does each make up?
Cortical (compact) bone makes up 80-85% and trabecular (cancellous) bone makes up 15-20%.
They contain the exact same cellular and matrix elements, but serve different functions.
What is the structure of cortical/compact bone on histology? How does this structure confer function?
It’s organized as osteons (aka haversion systems): cylindrical structures in which concentric layers of bone matrix form lamellae around a central canal.
The lamellar organization of osteons contributes to the bone’s ability to resist fracture.
What is the primary function of cortical bone?
Primarily structural, providing protection for organs and levels used for movement.
What is the appearance/structure of trabecular bone on histology?
Trabecular bone is normally organized in a lamellar fashion, but the individual trabeculae are too small to contain osteons.
What is the primary function of trabecular bone? How does its structure help confer function?
It’s primarily metabolic: it accounds for most of the bone surface area and most of the remodelign activity.
The large SA is necessary to allow for mineral homeostasis.
What are the two developmental pathways of bone?
Intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification
Describe the change in skeletal muscle mass through puberty and young adulthood in young males vs females? Why does this occur?
Mass increases for both through puberty and young adulthood, but does so to a greater extent in males than females.
- Puberty is later in males - leading to a larger body size
- Hormones in males promote greater modeling than in females - greater diameter in bone
How does skeletal mass change in the third decade of life for men vs women? What is the significance of this?
Net mass declines, but does so in a way that results in a greater decrease in mass in females than males.
This contributes to a higher susceptibility of females to fracture.
How is intramembranous bone formed? What are examples of bones that are intramembranous in origin?
By formation of osteoblasts from mesenchymal stem cells within what will become the periosteum.
The bone is formed de novo.
Exp. bones of the skull and the ribs.
________ bone is also formed in the bone collar region of a healing fracture and at the periosteal surface of long bones as they model. What does this allow them to achieve?
Intramembranous bone.
This allows them to achieve a greater diameter.
What is endochondral bone? How do they grow? What is an examples of endochondral bone?
Endochonrdal bones replace previously formed cartilage models.
They grow in length by proliferation of chondrocytes within the growth plate; linear growth ceases when the growth plates fuse.
Exp. long bones of the limbs
What is the growth plate?
Highly organized tissue in which chondrocytes are arrayed in colums, with different opsitions of the column occupied by cells as distinct points of maturation.
What are the zones of the growth plate and how does each function?
- Chondrocytes in the proliferation zone divide to replenish the growth plate.
- The chondrocytes then hypertorphy, undergo apoptosis, and are mineralized.
- Blood vessels invade the zone of calcified cartilage, which is resorbed by chondroclasts and the space is filled by osteoblasts and boen matrix.
Linear growth of long bones depends on what? When do growth plates close in humans?
The relative speed at which cells in the hypertrophic zone undergo apoptosis and those in the proliferative zone divide.
Growth plates close in late adolescence in response to estrogen signaling; the epiphysis at different sites fuse at different ages.
Which type of bone is remodeling much more actively?
Trabecular, which makes sense because of its more prominent role in maintaining mineral homeostasis.
What two principles are essential in understanding the bone remodeling cycle (ie about the speed of this proces)?
- Resorption is relatively rapid - requiring ~2 weeks
- Bone formation is slow, requiring 4-6 months for full mineralization to occur
Remodeling of trabecular bone provides a mechanism by which extracellular fluid can do what?
Buffer its calcium and phosphate content.
PTH and 1,25 di-PH vitamin D are potent activators of osteoclast activity, and bone resorption involves dissolution of the bone mineral, thus providing free Ca and PO4 that can enter the EC fluids and blood.
(this is because PTH signals that Ca is LOW and the bone should be resorbed)
How much Ca is exchanged by trabecular bone each day? What is this essential for?
Approx. twice the amount that is absorbed from food or lost in the urine each day.
Active exchange of minerals between the bone and circulation is essential for moment to moment mineral homeostasis.